April 29, 2008
FLEXIBLE FRIENDS - THE OBSERVER, THE INDEPENDENT, AND THE MYTH OF A MEDIA
SPECTRUM
A Vain Search For Principle
In a BBC interview in 1996, Andrew Marr, then of the Independent, described
the ’spectrum’ of media available to the British public:
“We have a press which has, it seems to me, a relatively wide range
of views - there is a pretty small ’c’ conservative majority,
but there are left-wing papers, and there is a pretty large offering of
views running from the far right to the far left, for those who want them.”
(http://www.zmag.org/
Chomsky/interviews/9602-big-idea.html)
The “left-wing papers” Marr had in mind were the Guardian,
the Observer, the Independent and the Independent on Sunday.
It is interesting to consider Marr‘s comments in light of the April
10 announcement that Roger Alton, formerly editor of the Observer, will
become editor of the Independent in June. Alton resigned from the Observer
last year after rumours of a ’civil war’ with the Guardian.
There were also allegations that, in 2002, the Observer had suppressed important
testimony on Iraq’s alleged weapons of mass destruction (see below)
even as it was publishing false stories from intelligence sources. It was
claimed that Alton’s political editor, Kamal Ahmed, had helped Blair’s
aides with one of their infamous “dodgy dossiers” on Iraq’s
WMD - Ahmed also resigned. Alton and Ahmed have both denied the claim. Geoffrey
Levy wrote in the Daily Mail:
“Alton's real mistake, it seems, was in supporting the Iraq war.
This attitude never went down very well at Guardian House, and led to
a more localised conflict, which has turned the two newspapers into what
one senior journalist described as ‘hotbeds of fear and loathing’.”
(Levy, ‘Fear and loathing in Farringdon Road,’ Daily Mail,
October 25, 2007)
It is a bitter irony that Alton will soon be editing the Independent, which
opposed the Iraq war.
In January 2006, Stephen Glover, the Independent’s media commentator,
wrote of the Observer: “one looks in vain to its heart for that old
voice of principle and conviction, as well as intellectual distinction.
I am not sure that Mr Alton, charming and gifted man though he unquestionably
is, believes in very much”. (Glover, ‘Colourful - and that's
not just the Observer editor's language,’ The Independent, January
16, 2006)
So was the Observer under Alton really to the left of the media spectrum?
In responding to the question of whether he would take the Independent further
left, Alton commented recently:
“I wouldn't have regarded myself as the most leftwing person...
Left and right are effectively meaningless terms now. I wouldn't define
myself by those terms and I don't think a newspaper should either.”
(Stephen Brook, ‘Alton aims to make Indy “indispensable,”’
The Guardian, April 10, 2008)
He added:
"I would like to include a bit more luxury and have a sense of specialness.”
Certainly the words “left” and “right” are “effectively
meaningless” in today’s media. But then it is the media’s
self-assigned task to render just about every issue meaningless. As ever,
Noam Chomsky is on hand to restore some common sense to the debate:
“If the left means anything, it means it’s concerned for
the needs, welfare, and rights of the general population.” (http://www.zmag.org/
ZMag/july00barsamian.htm)
News Coverage And The Social Elite
The fact is that the general population is not well represented within
elite journalism. In 2006, research conducted by the Sutton Trust found
that 54% of Britain’s leading news journalists were educated in private
schools, which account for 7% of the school population as a whole. In addition,
45% of the country’s leading journalists had attended Oxbridge. Sir
Peter Lampl, chairman of the Sutton Trust, asked:
“[Is] it healthy that those who are most influential in determining
and interpreting the news agenda have educational backgrounds that are
so different to the vast majority of the population?“
He also asked:
“Is news coverage preoccupied with the issues and interests of
the social elite that journalists represent?” (The Educational Backgrounds
of Leading Journalists, Sutton Trust, June 2006; http://www.suttontrust.com/reports/
Journalists-backgrounds-final-report.pdf)
Alton’s dismissal of ’left’ and ’right’ as
meaningful terms is surely an example of exactly that. Lampl will not have
been surprised to learn that Alton’s father was a distinguished Oxford
don and that Alton was privately educated at Clifton College before attending
Exeter College, Oxford.
For purposes of ‘niche marketing’, senior journalists are of
course very keen to distance themselves from the idea that they represent
elite interests. Instead, the focus is very much on high ethical ideals.
Simon Kelner, Alton’s predecessor as Independent editor, explained
in 2005 what the name 'Independent' meant to him:
"...there will be no retreat from the qualities that have underpinned
The Independent since its launch. As we approach the general election,
the role for an independent paper, one that is not driven by proprietorial
agenda and that has no party allegiance, is as great as ever." (Kelner,
'The Independent: a new look for the original quality compact newspaper,’
The Independent, April 12, 2005)
This is the same myth propounded by Robert Fisk, who commented in 2003:
"I work for a British newspaper called The Independent; if you read
it, you'll find that we are." (http://www.robert-
fisk.com/demnow_RF_interview25mar2003.htm)
The reality is rather less glorious. Former New Statesman editor Peter
Wilby wrote recently of Alton and Kelner’s close friendship:
“Both have political views that may be described as flexible or
undogmatic, depending on how you look at it.
“True, one committed his paper to supporting the Iraq invasion,
the other to opposing it. But given different circumstances, it is easy
to imagine either of them deciding on the opposite course. Many friendships
were ruptured by Iraq. That between Alton and Kelner survived - another
example of how similar they are.” (Wilby, ‘It is. Is he?’
The Guardian, April 14, 2008; http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2008/apr
/14/theindependent.pressandpublishing)
The problem is that many people believe the Independent is a principled
voice of left-leaning liberalism. Wilby quietly demolished this illusion:
“[T]he Independent's founders never intended it to be a left-wing
paper. Their preference, in the late 80s, was for Thatcherism with a human
face. They expected to gain most readers from the Telegraph and Times.
As it turned out, they found leftwing journalists more willing to join
their venture and acquired more readers from the Guardian than from other
papers. The editorial line remained pro-market and generally pro-foreign
intervention, but compassionate towards the poor (in a vague sort of way)
and leftish on social issues such as race, crime and smacking. Its position,
in many respects, anticipated Blairism. Alton, who in 2006 described hostility
to Blair as ‘quite baffling‘, could claim to echo the founders'
views more closely than Kelner has done.”
Writing in the Guardian, Stephen Brook noted that Kelner, now the Independent’s
managing director and editor-in-chief, “has basically outsourced the
Independent's marketing department to Freud Communications, run by the well-connected
Matthew Freud”:
“Freud will help to fashion the message that it connects directly
with brand-conscious, upscale, young, high-earning readers.” (Brook,
‘Upward and onward for the Independent's revolutionary,’ The
Guardian, April 13, 2008)
The reality, then, is of a corporate cynicism that places advertising revenues
attracted by “brand-conscious, upscale, young, high-earning readers”
above the grave problems that afflict and threaten the “needs, welfare,
and rights of the general population”. This is the actual and metaphorical
bottom line.
Faithfully Reporting Claim And Counter-Claim - Observer-Style
As we discussed on March 5 (www.medialens.org/alerts/08
/080305_flat_earth_news.php), in the autumn of 2002, former CIA analyst
Mel Goodman told Observer correspondent Ed Vulliamy that the CIA believed
Iraq did not possess weapons of mass destruction. Goodman
was speaking out at a time when such revelations might have derailed Blair’s
plans to go to war the following spring, with unknown consequences for Bush’s
war plan. Over the next four months, Vulliamy submitted seven versions of
the story for publication - The Observer, led by Alton, rejected all of
them. We wrote to Vulliamy on February 27:
Dear Ed
Hope you're well. I've been reading Nick Davies's account of how your
reports on Mel Goodman's revelations were rejected seven times by the
Observer. Did you try to publish the pieces elsewhere? Why did you not
resign in protest at these obvious acts of censorship on such a crucial
matter?
Best wishes
David Edwards
Vulliamy replied with what can only be described as an angst-ridden email,
but insisted the contents were not for publication. We wrote again on February
28:
“Can I ask, also off the record (just out of human interest), what
reasons did they give you for not publishing? You're a major journalist
on the paper, this was cast-iron testimony from a credible, named source
- what on earth did they say?”
Vulliamy said he would answer our questions later (again, off the record).
We received no further reply. We wrote again, and he again said he would
reply. We wrote again on April 21 and he told us he was busy and again promised
more later.
We also wrote to Roger Alton on April 21:
Hi Roger
We hope you're well. Congratulations on becoming editor of the Independent.
In his book Flat Earth News, Nick Davies describes how the Observer's
Ed Vulliamy told him about his autumn 2002 conversations with former CIA
analyst Mel Goodman. It seems Goodman was willing to go on the record
in telling Vulliamy that the CIA believed Iraq had +no+ weapons of mass
destruction. Vulliamy says he submitted seven versions of this story to
the Observer over a period of four months and it was rejected every time.
Is this true? If so, why did the Observer reject the story? Was this not
a crucial story offered at a crucial time by a highly credible journalist
citing credible sources?
Best wishes
David Edwards and David Cromwell
Alton replied on April 25:
Hi there ... Thank you for your good wishes ... I do not start there
for some months though and am not the editor of the Independent now
As for your other point, so it was my old pal Ed who grassed me up eh??
Lordluvaduck, what a surprise ... like Falstaff and Prince Hal eh??
Now, I don't know anything about this tale ... while I think an editor
should read, or try to read, all the 250,000 - odd words that go into
an edition of the Observer, I would not expect them to read all the several
million words that are submitted eaxh week ... as I understand it, this
story was not used by the desk, on journalistic grounds, and indeed this
was a decision taken by a very anti-war executive ..
There was an article setting all this out in a recent edition of Press
Gazette, which I am sure you can easily find...
Yours sincerely
Roger Alton
How remarkable that Alton is unaware of the Mel Goodman “tale”.
We can find nothing in Press Gazette that explains why seven versions of
Vulliamy's article were rejected over four months. We approached several
of the journalists involved for comment on this bizarre response, none was
forthcoming.
In 2004, we asked Alton about the Observer’s performance on Iraq
in 2004. He responded:
"I think our reporting on Iraq was exceptionally fair. Journalism
is by definition a first draft of history. It is rough and ready, people
doing their best under trying circumstances often. We faithfully reported
claim and counter claim in the build up to Iraq. With exceptional journalists
like Peter Beaumont, Jason Burke, and Ed Vulliamy our news, feature and
commentary coverage was fair, thorough and unbiased." (Email to Media
Lens, August 17, 2004)
Ironic words in light of what we know now. A year earlier, a journalist
at the Observer, who asked to remain anonymous, wrote to us:
"Your media alerts and website have afforded me great solace and
insight over the last eighteen months - making me feel less alone and
more angry as the wretched failure of the 'fourth estate' to hold our
'leaders' to account becomes increasingly apparent." (Email to Media
Lens, March 2003)
On reflection, it seems incredibly naïve to imagine that free speech
will flourish under corporate capitalism. It is true that we do not face
the kind of physical threats offered by a totalitarian system - but so what?
For most people, the threat of serious damage to a lucrative, high status
career is enough to ensure their silence.
In the last decade of corresponding with journalists we have found that
they often do behave as though they were living in a police
state, or at least in a state policed by corporate power. Many are privately
supportive and helpful. Indeed, many journalists who might be expected to
be fierce opponents of our work, are in fact enraged by the mendacity and
destructiveness of the media employing them. But they tell us their comments
must be off the record; that they are not willing to comment over the internet
(which is surely monitored); that they will help us only on condition that
their names be concealed. Could it be more obvious that journalists do not
feel free to write the truth about Alton and Kelner, and much else, because
of the likely professional consequences?
Above, we cited the biting criticisms of Alton made by the Independent’s
Stephen Glover in 2006. Hugo Rifkind of the Times recalled these comments
this month and noted that Glover had also written that the Observer under
Alton was "bursting with stuff I do not want to read".
“And, his new Editor may surmise, would not wish to write”,
Rifkind commented wryly, hinting that Glover may pay a price for his earlier
candour. (Rifkind, ‘Write and wrong,’ The Times, April 11, 2008)
We spend our time well when we recall that Alton and Kelner have edited
two of the Great White Hopes of the British liberal press - newspapers which
many people believe are deeply concerned about the needs, welfare, and rights
of the general population.
SUGGESTED ACTION
The goal of Media Lens is to promote rationality, compassion and respect
for others. If you do write to journalists, we strongly urge you to maintain
a polite, non-aggressive and non-abusive tone.
Write to Roger Alton
Email: rogermalton@googlemail.com
Write to Simon Kelner
Email: s.kelner@independent.co.uk
Write to Ed Vulliamy
Email: ed.vulliamy@observer.co.uk
Please send a copy of your emails to us
Email: editor@medialens.org
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